[<<Mr Gandhi seems to have overcome his personal fears and taken the plunge
as a full-time politician, which should augur well for his party. He is
using every trick to win support from innumerable visits to temples, to
reaching out to jawans, kisans, students, dalits, Muslims and regional
politicians. Going by his metamorphosis in just one year, the BJP will be
committing a political harakiri by dismissing him as a “Pappu”. Now “Pappu”
can not only dance, but make others dance too!>>

In fact, making his bumbling ways a sort of past history, Rahul
demonstrated his gradually acquired mettle, for leadership, particularly,
in the aftermath of the last Karnataka state poll.
To be sure, he was more than ably aided both in Bengaluru and Delhi.

It's perhaps worth recalling the comment made by this observer then:
<<The Bhakts, very much like their "hero" and his mentoring organisation,
care not a fig for "democratic values", "morality" and all that.
These are just a swarm of pests.
But, what they really do value is "success", no matter by what means.
The Modi-Shah evil duo, this time round, has miserably flunked that test.
Not, of course, because of any moral scruples.

Starting with the swearing in of one who clearly lacked legislative
majority to the Attorney General formally arguing in the highest court of
the land that the defection law won't apply in case one does so before
taking the oath - laying the nefarious game plan just bare out in the open
with no sense of embarrassment whatever, to be duly followed up with the
frantic efforts to buy up the newly elected representatives of the people
with hundreds of crores and intimidating them by making use of the ED and
IT to physical abduction of two MLAs, to be eventually rescued by the
police, following the Supreme Court orders, to withdrawal of police
protection at the camping place of the opposition MLAs, preceding the Court
intervention, to denial of the use of the airport by the aircrafts meant to
carry them out of the state to the (caretaker) Chief Minister taking
decisions beyond his legitimate mandate to appointment of a tainted Pro Tem
Speaker, flagrantly flouting well set conventions.

The list is too long and gut churning.
Under the circumstances, no state secret either.

And, beyond the circle of Bhakts, so many others watched this sordid drama
unfolding, before their very eyes.

Yet, at the end of it all, not a single - not a single, defection could be
effected.
What a miserable failure!
In the process, the duo exposed themselves in the starkest naked ugliness.
A modest and limited electoral victory, with so much elan and customary
(56") posturings, was steered into a grand political disaster.
"Dhann Ki Baat" backed up with obscene exercise of state power, eventually,
fell flat right on its face.

The prompt responses and proactive moves made by the Congress-JD(S)
leadership and the commendable role played by the concerned Supreme Court
bench in scrupulously discharging its duties with remakable degree of
alacrity, in no small measure, made this grand "failure" happen.
The directive to telecast live the proceedings on the floor of the assembly
proved to be the final fatal blow.

***Let Karnataka prove to be the turning point that every right-thinking
Indian is pining for.*** [Emphasis in original.]>>

(Ref.: 'Let Karnataka prove to be the turning point that every
right-thinking Indian is pining for' at <
https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg22650.html>.)

If Karnataka has indeed proved to be the turning point, the current round
of state polls clearly established that the Congress is very much back in
the game.
It's just not going to a "Congress-Mukt Bharat" (or "Democracy-Mukt
Bharat"?) only too soon.
A serious battle is on the cards.

Of course, it's no time to be euphoric.
Rather, it's time to pull one's socks up.
And, a more meaningful coordinations among the anti-BJP parties is the call
of the hour.]

http://www.asianage.com/opinion/oped/131218/pappu-can-not-only-dance-he-can-make-others-dance-too.html?fbclid=IwAR2mcbH0w7pInkzCWwUYwecOvFMjDEpPHOM37-FD8n-YoI2a2JB5waiNbkA

‘Pappu’ can not only dance... he can make others dance too!

Surendra Kumar
The writer is a former ambassador

Published : Dec 13, 2018, 5:31 am IST Updated : Dec 13, 2018, 5:31 am IST

The watershed moment was his 40 minute-long pointed speech in Parliament
which he capped with a forced hug on a bewildered Modi (July 20)

Congress President Rahul Gandhi (Photo: ANI)

When after a decade-long demand for him to take over the reins of the
party, Rahul Gandhi eventually got elected as the 60th president of the
Indian National Congress on December 16, 2017, the BJP was pleased. Its
president, Amit Shah, and its spokespersons publicly claimed that Mr Gandhi
was an asset to them for ensuring the victory of their party. One year is a
long time in politics. After the results of the Assembly elections in
Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chhattisgarh, reflecting the mood of the
people of these states, the Sangh Parivar might wish to revisit their
assessment of the young Congress president and reset their strategy for the
2019 parliamentary elections.

Mr Gandhi has endured harsh criticism, ridicule, unflattering jibes,
constant trolling on the social media and disdainful dismissal of his
leadership qualities in the last 10 years. He has been called a “shehzada”
who was a reluctant politician, a novice in cut-throat competitive
politics, whose party has shrunken beyond recognition and earned the
distinction of snatching defeat out of the jaws of victory. He has been
riled as a “Pappu” who can’t dance and has been catapulted as the president
of the party solely on account his family. The party, which once ruled over
the whole country, has been reduced to just one and a half state while he
was doing his decade-long apprentice in politics. Though he wasn’t the
party chief, as its star campaigner he couldn’t avoid a major share of
responsibility for the defeats of his party in the parliamentary and
Assembly elections.

Mr Gandhi carries the burden of resurrecting the 135-year-old,
weather-beaten Congress Party whose cadre until the recent elections lacked
motivation, enthusiasm and fire within to take the fight to the enemy camp.
Over the years, it has become a lumbering, battle-shy, sycophantic, motley
crowd of cheerleaders and hangers-on who have lost touch with the masses.
He also seems weighed down by the responsibility of carrying forward the
legacy of his family, which has given five generations of leaders but whose
charisma and appeal has been on the wane.

Besides, in the form of the present Prime Minister, he has a formidable
rival. Narendra Modi is a self-made, shrewd, battle-hardened, media and
business-savvy successful chief minister who has risen to the top by
outwitting and toppling the veterans of his own party and meticulously
creating a widely-held perception, presenting a grand national vision with
his oratorical and communication skills and announcements of hundreds of
policies and public-oriented schemes solidly supported by a well-trained,
well-indoctrinated and disciplined ground swell of the RSS cadre. With a
slew of tantalising promises and an image of a 24x7 CEO-style Prime
Minister bubbling with energy, confidence and ideas, he is able to convince
millions of Indians, especially the Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and
WhatsApp-hooked youth, that he alone could transform India for the better
in the 21st century. He is heads and shoulders above his political rivals
in use of the social media; it helps.

On the other hand, prior to December 2017, Mr Gandhi’s own conduct didn’t
generate a positive image. He criss-crossed the country to discover India a
la his grandfather, slept at Kalavati’s place in Amethi with the then
British foreign secretary to reach out to dalits (Kalavati didn’t vote for
his party), disappeared from India for long spells several times leaving
his party spokespersons fumble to explain his whereabouts, tore down the
ordinance promulgated by his party’s government while Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh was still abroad, looked nervous and unsure in his interview
with Arnab Goswami of Times Now and couldn’t read two lines of a Urdu
couplet in Parliament without looking at a written piece of paper. Going by
his Hamlet-like confusing signals, the media went to the town to pronounce
that he wasn’t cut out for politics; he wasn’t Prime Minister material!

Mr Gandhi’s trip to Cambodia, Myanmar, Vietnam (2015) and his successful
lecture tour to the prestigious American universities, including the
University of California at Berkley, seem to have done him a lot of good.
He discovered self-belief that he could take on the seemingly invincible
Narendra Modi and defeat him. He seems to have concluded that targeting the
Prime Minister directly day after day will give him a new, bold avatar. He
has borrowed several tricks of Mr Modi himself. He still rolls up his
kurta’s sleeves and enacts a Modi keeping his message simple and pointed:
Bhaiyya, aapke bank ke khate mein 15 lakh rupaye aaye? Aapko naukari mili?
Aapko apni fasal ki sahi keemat mili? Aapka loan maanf hua? Aapko OROP
mili? Himself pronouncing a no, he adds: Kyon ki Modiji ke pass aapke liye
paisa nahi hai parantu Anil Ambani ke liye hai, Adani ke liye hai! This
oversimplified response resonates with millions of disgruntled voters
today. After the biting “suit-boot ki sarkar” jibe, his chaukidar ban gaya
chor allegation has rattled the BJP and the government. It dents Mr Modi’s
famous line: “Na khaunga na khane doonga.” Irrespective of the facts and
assertions to the contrary, Mr Gandhi has, emulating late V.P. Singh, uses
the Rafale deal to create a perception, at least among the urban
population, that daal mei kuch kala hai.

The watershed moment was his 40 minute-long pointed speech in Parliament
which he capped with a forced hug on a bewildered Modi (July 20). In the
last three months, he has emerged as a feisty, energetic, confident and
competitive campaigner who tries to be wherever a problem crops up, flags
the local issues and articulates them with empathy, thus connecting with
the people which he wasn’t able to do in the past. While the disenchantment
with the NDA government and the mismatch between Mr Modi’s tall promises
and actual delivery have helped as has the strong anti-incumbency feelings
against the three BJP chief ministers, for the first time since Mr Gandhi’s
coronation as president, voters have started looking at the Congress again,
though results have been below expectations, as a serious alternative. Mr
Gandhi seems to have overcome his personal fears and taken the plunge as a
full-time politician, which should augur well for his party. He is using
every trick to win support from innumerable visits to temples, to reaching
out to jawans, kisans, students, dalits, Muslims and regional politicians.
Going by his metamorphosis in just one year, the BJP will be committing a
political harakiri by dismissing him as a “Pappu”. Now “Pappu” can not only
dance, but make others dance too!

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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